#Trim(mainLayout.Name)# Advertising Info Advertising Info

 
News Home Text Only News Cruising Australia Cruising USA Cruising Canada Boats for Sale
Sail-World Racing Powerboat-World MarineBusiness-World FishingBoating


 


Sail-World.com : The amazing history of the world's oldest active sailing ship

The amazing history of the world's oldest active sailing ship

'Star of India docks at San Diego'    .

If you believe the Guinness Book of Records, the full-rigged iron windjammer Star of India is the oldest active sailing ship in the world. She was built in 1863, making her an amazing 148 years old, and still sailing! Her home these days is the San Diego Maritime Museum in California, USA, but that's not to imply that she's moribund.

This beautiful creation of ancient naval architecture meets U.S. Coast Guard requirements, undergoes routine maintenance, and is fully seaworthy ('Seaworthy' means being fit for a voyage, trusted to transport cargos safely, and operating effectively even in high seas.) She is probably the only ship still active that saw service in both World Wars. Manned by a volunteer crew of veteran sailors, the ship maintains also regular sailing schedules.

Star of India below decks -  .. .  
And what a history! She's housed in the USA these days, but she was born (sorry built) in Ramsey in the Isle of Man to operate as a windjammer.

Named Euterpe, the muse of music, she was a full-rigged ship (a ship that has 3 masts and squaresails on all 3 masts), but she had a colourful beginning.

In her very first trip after launching, she sailed for Calcutta, and was still on the coast of Wales when she had a collision with an unlit Spanish brig, which destroyed the boom on her jib and damaged the rigging.

After the collision, the crew mutinied, refusing to continue, and the ship returned to port. Seventeen members of her crew were jailed for their mutiny with hard labour.

The very next year more bad luck befell her, when her crew was forced to cut away her masts in a gale in the Bay of Bengal off the east coast of India, and limped into port for repair. On her return voyage to Europe, her Captain died and was buried at sea.

Maybe the owners thought she was a jinxed ship, because after these two terrible voyages, they sold her and she went on to make largely uneventful voyages to and from India for her new owners.

Star of India under sail in 2002 -  .. .  
Replaced for the cargo trade by steamships, in 1871 she began twenty-five years of carrying passengers and some freight in the New Zealand emigrant trade, each voyage going eastward around the world before returning to England.

The fastest of her 21 passages to New Zealand took 100 days, the longest 143 days. She also made ports of call in Australia, California, and Chile. A baby was born on one of those trips en route to New Zealand, and was given the middle name Euterpe.

Finally, after 21 circumnavigations with passengers, at the end of the century she was sold again, renamed Star of India, re-rigged as a barque and became a passenger/cargo ship again, carrying such ordinary cargoes as timber, salmon, sugar and coal across and around the Pacific, making 22 voyages to Alaska.

So after an amazingly varied career career sailing the world, she retired in 1926, and was sold to San Diego authorities.

She lay dormant for a few years, but in 1962 the process of her restoration began, and in 1976 she finally put to sea again. While she is kept in excellent seaworthy condition, being an old lady, she sails at least once a year. For the rest of the time she is part of a Living History Program in which students are immersed in the history of sail.

Her skilled volunteer crew of Maritime Museum members train all year in order to keep sailing her.




by Des Ryan

  

Click on the FB Like link to post this story to your FB wall

http://www.sail-world.com/index.cfm?nid=79207

8:54 PM Sat 15 Jan 2011 GMT



Click here for printer friendly version
Click here to send us feedback or comments about this story.


Related News Stories:

22 May 2013  'Memoirs of a Cruising Dog', sailing on South Islander
12 May 2013  Book review: A Thousand Miles from Anywhere, Sandra Clayton
12 May 2013  Book review: A Thousand Miles from Anywhere, Sandra Clayton
29 Apr 2013  Book Feature: Dag Pike's Cruising under Sail
31 Mar 2013  Book feature: 'The Sinking of the Bounty'
03 Mar 2013  Book Review: Tasmanian Anchorage Guide - new edition released
12 Feb 2013  Happy Hooking, The Art of Anchoring, now in Kindle
05 Feb 2013  Book of the Week: The Atlantic Crossing Guide, sixth edition
15 Jan 2013  'Sailing Close to the Wind' - following Phoenicia around Africa
30 Dec 2012  Book of the Week: 'Round About the Earth'
MORE STORIES ...

 
Our Advertisers are committed to our sport, please support them!
This site and its contents are © Copyright TetraMedia Pty. Ltd and/or the original author, photographer etc. All Rights Reserved.

Photographs are copyright by law. If you wish to use or buy a photograph you must contact the photographer directly (there is a hyperlink in most cases to their website, or do a Google search.) with your request.

Please do not contact Sail-World.com as we cannot give permission for use of other photographer’s images.

Only if the photographer named on the image is Sail-world.com, Powerboat-world.com, Marinebusiness-world.com or NZBoating-World.com.
Contact us .
Ph: +61 2 8006 1873 or complete our feedback form    Contact us .
   View our Privacy Policy.    [Go Home]     [  Banner Advertising Specification]    [Bot Archive ]

Customised news feeds -Marine Industry companies, Clubs and Associations have their own customised version of our news feed on their website.
Look_here_to_see_examples

 
CLD